Yeah, they'd be better off as links.
Thanks for those, Kail. Not only were those funny, but so much more well-drawn than many Peanuts spoofs.
Violet grew up hot!
Oh, and page-stretchers suck.
Then, by all means, let it get creepy. Remember the Easter special, when Snoopy danced with Peppermint Patty and Marcie? Or how about Snoopy going figure skating? Considering that Snoopy owns sophisticated art, is able to prepare a full-course Thanksgiving dinner in his doghouse, and drive a car across France, I'd sooner date him than any of the human Peanuts characters!![]()
The unobtainable little red haired girl...(well she did kiss him once)
Though we see a Little Red-Haired Girl in the animated specials (and her name is Heather), Schulz didn't consider those appearances "official."I thought we never saw the little red-haired girl?The unobtainable little red haired girl...(well she did kiss him once)
Though we see a Little Red-Haired Girl in the animated specials (and her name is Heather), Schulz didn't consider those appearances "official."I thought we never saw the little red-haired girl?The unobtainable little red haired girl...(well she did kiss him once)
For me, one of the most moving Peanuts strips was one of the final Sunday strips. Charlie Brown and Lucy are outside, and she's holding the football. She's called into the house, she has a phone call. She asks Rerun to hold the ball. The final panel, Lucy wants to know what happened. Rerun tells her, "You'll never know." There was something about that that was just so right. I know, in my heart, that Charlie Brown kicked the football; I know, in my heart, that Rerun idolized Charlie Brown and wouldn't have pulled it away. But I also know that there's ambiguity there, and maybe he didn't kick the football.I was watching on YouTube some clips from the CB special where TLRHG appears -"It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown" and it reminded me of how much I fucking hate Lucy.
And the team giving Charlie Brown a hard time for his missed kicks.He missed them because Lucy pulled away the fucking ball! And Charlie is giving a hard time over it by his two best [only] fucking friends Patty and Linus!
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^You might like this strip then:
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One of the great things about Fantagraphics' Complete Peanuts collections is that the evolution of the characters' appearances is so apparent. They kept evolving, especially Snoopy, right up until about 1968. At that point, the Peanuts characters get locked in on a certain look, the look you'll see on things like greeting cards and MetLife ads.Peanuts was often a depressing comic strip. It started out with good artwork and kids acting more like kids. Snoopy looked like a beagle. It was better early on, but didn't become as iconic until Snoopy anthropomorphisized and the artwork was more simple.
That's a frequent complaint, and I think you could make the argument that the ossification of the characters' appearances in the '68-'70 period bears that out.When Schulz passed away, somebody wrote that after the 70's, the strip was going through the motions. I think I agree with that.
Comic strips evolve over time. Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes was different in a lot of ways in its early years; Calvin had a no-good uncle, for instance. Berkeley Breathed's Outland started out as something that had nothing to do with Bloom County, and then it turned into Bloom County, Part II. You don't know what works -- and what doesn't -- until you try it.They also said Spike was the worst character he created. Maybe. But I didn't know about Charlotte Braun at the time.
^You might like this strip then:
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Don't forget that he also turns his doghouse into a Sopwith Camel (after making it into a time machine as well.)
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